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FACE TWELVE NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS MEETING To the Stockholders of the Lydia ’Cotton Mills, located near Clinton, Sooth Carolina: Pursuant to a resolution of the Board of ^Directors of the Lydia Cot- tea Mills, duly adopted at a meeting of the said Directors, held on August 5th, 1924, a meeting of the Stock holders of the Lydia Cotton Mills, lo cated near Clinton, in Laurens Coun ty, in the State of South Carolina, is hereby called, and will be held at the office of the Lydia Cotton Mills, lo cated on their premises, near Clinton, Senth Carolina, on Tuesday, Septem ber 9th, 1924, at the hour of 3:30 o’clock, p. m., for the purpose of con sidering a resolution, duly adopted August 5th, 1924, by the said Board of Directors, to increase the Capital Stock of the said Lydia Cotton Mills, all of which is now Common Stock, from 1180,000.00 to $400,000.00, by is suing 2400 shares of additional Com anon Stock, of the par value of $100.- 90 per share; also for the purpose of considering a resolution duly adopt ed August 5th, 1924, by the said Board of Directors, that Preferred Stock, bearing date October 1st, 1924, be issued by Lydia Cotton Mihs, to the amount of $300,000.00, divided in to 3000 shares of the par value of 9100.00 per share. The said Preferred Stock to pay dividends not to exceed seven per cent (7%) per annum, payable out of the net profits of the Company semi-annually, xm -the • first" days of April and October of each year. ’ At the expiration of five years from the date of the issue of said Preferred Stock, the Lydia Cotton Mills shall have the right to redeem by lot or otherwise, as the Directors shall de termine, all or any part, of the said Preferred Stock, by paying therefor, the par value, together with all ac crued dividends. All of the Stockholders of the Ly dia Cotton Mills, are respectfully in vited and requested to be present at the Stockholders meeting hereby call ed to be held on September 9th, 1924. M. S. BAILEY, President. M. BAILEY, Sec. and Treas. Clinton, S. C., August 5th, 1924. THE CLINTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, S. C. THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1924 Summer Hints for Young Mothers THE CHILD WHO WON'T PLAY Healthy children love to romp in summer from early morn until the last call, and if your youngster mopes about the house and looks yellow- iah, you may know it isn't welt Think over the little one’s diet. It ahonld be watched more carefully ia summer. Too much heavy or raw food causes biliousness and indigestion. Usually a thorough cleansing with Liv-o-lax and a little better sense about the food will straighten out the child quickly. Liv-o-lax is a vege table laxative that works on the liver, too. Lix-o-lax is easy to take. Children like it. You can get a good-sized bot tle at the drug store for 30c. J. B. FRONTIS JEWELER CLINTON, 8. C. Dr. Felder Smith OPTOMETRIST MODERN SERVICE Speetulist Jacobs & Company Building Phone 29 Take for the liver Swim In a kj LAKE *$*»■*» Whence Came the Cliff Dwellers of Mesa Verde and Where Did They Go? By CONGRESSMAN E. T. TAILOR, Speech in the House. A T LEAST a thousand years ago—maybe 8,000 and poaeibly dur ing the Tut-Ankh-Amen period—there lived in the Mesa Verde region a large population of human beings who flourished and then disappeared. We call them the Cliff Dwellers because we know of no other name or race. Who were these peculiar people? Where did they come from? When did they live there? How long did they live there? When did they leave there? Why did they leave? Where did they go? Echo answers, “Where?” We know they lived in large communities. They must have had some kind of organized government They were not a warlike people in the sepse that most other Indian tribes were. They cultivated com, beans, cotton and squash. They had domesticated turkeys, hut apparently no dogs. Their cultivated lands were upon the mesa, high above most o# their reservoirs, and there was no way of irrigating their crops by ditches. They had no sheep dr horses or burros or any beasts of burden, so the women and children apparently'followed the custom of the present Pueblo Indians and carried jars of water on their heads up over the foot trails for domestic use and also for the irrigation of their scanty crops. We know these strange people were artisans. They wove cloth of cotton and of the yucca plant fibers. .They appreciated the beautiful. They made fire bv twirling two sticks. They made quite a variety of pot* terv. They made many wooden utensils. They had no metals or glass. They had no written language. They wove sandals and baskets. Their weapons, hammers, axes, spear points, arrowheads and tools were made of stone. Their implements-were mostly made of bone. They quarried-and shaped4he stones-into regular fornntnd bmt’gootY masonry that has defied the ravages of time ever since hundreds of years before Columbus was born and before the Spaniards ever touched foot upon this continent. There are many thousands of their ruins and relics of various kinds throughout southwestern Colorado and in New Mexico and Arizona. But the largest and best preserved, the most notable and finest of the prehistoric cliff dwellings in the United States, if not in the world, are in the shelter of caves in the sides of the high-walled canyons of Mesa Verde National park. “Enough of the Italy of the Hotel-Keeper, the Resort of the Idle” By PREMIER MUSSOLINI, in “Political Speeches* Enough of the Italy of the hotelkeeper, resort of the idle with their odious Baedekers in their hands; enough of dusting old plasterwork; we are, and wish to be, a nation of producers. We are a people who wiU ta- pand without aiming at conquest We shall gain the respect of the world through our industries and our work. And again: Every man must raise the standard of his activity, both in the office and in the factory. • • • The government, which I have the honor to represent, is the government of speed. * * * We belong to the generation of builders who, by work and discipline, with hands and brains, desire to reach the ultimate and longed for goal, the greatness of the future nation, which will be • nation of producers and not of parasites. The twenty million Italians who work with their hands have the right to defend their interests. What we oppose is the deceitful action of politicians to the detriment of the working classes; we fight these new priests who promise, in bad faith, a paradise they do not believe in them selves. • • • Once there were courtiers who burned incense before the kings and the popes; now there is a new breed, which bums incense hypocritically before the proletariat • * * We say that the prole tariat, before it tries to govern the nation, must learn to govern itself, must make itself worthy technically and, still more, morally, because government is a tremendously difficult and complicated task. The nation is composed of millions upon millions of individuals, whose interests clash, and no superior beings exist who con reconcile all differences and create unity of life and progress. You City People and Country People Have Largely the Same Problems v - ARTHUR C. PAGE, Chicago Editor, by Radio. You people in the city, and you in the country, have largely the same problems, whether you realize it or not, and if either one of you should attempt to put yourself ahead by pushing the other one back, you might succeed for a little while, but not for long. Chicago is built on agriculture and a great deal of agriculture de pends on Chicago. Thousands of fanners within the radius of my voice make their living by producing arid selling food and other products to people in Chicago, and thousands of people in Chicago make their living from the things they help to produce that are sold to farmers. There ought to be the closest bond of sympathy between this great city and the great agricultural territory which surrounds it, the greatest agricultural territory in the world. It is a most excellent sign of national health when folk in Chicago and you folk out on the farm begin to understand each other, to realize there should be rio antagonism between you, but that you are in the same boat—that when one profits you 'both profit; when one loses, you both eventually lose. No Nation Has Adopted the Sermon on the * Mount as ^ Rule of Life • <- By A MAUDS ROYDEN, English Woman Preacher. If religion is going out of style, it deserves to. Far only those things go out of style which meet no real human need. But in fact—and just because it is an eternal need of the human spirit, religion never can go out of style. All that is happening is that the need for religion, which is simply the need of God, is changing its fonns. 'Hie change, in this generation, has perhaps been accelerated by the war. There is an uneasy wonder whether a religion that has pro- claimj&d for nearly 2,000 years a God who is the Prince of Peace ought to have been able by now to put a stop to war, at least betwton nations who profess belief in it. I must admit that if I found nations and individuals persistently liv ing up to the tenets of the Sermon on the Monnt and finding that the bouse of their civilization, far from being founded on a rock and standing, was really founded on sand and fell down, I should hold myself excused from trying to be a Christian any more. The difficulty, however, has only to be stated to disappear. No na tion and very few individuals havt persistently adopted the Sermon on the Mount as s rule of lift. > *»<<, - v, vs-rwi«ac * l ’ \ Bpes Deserves Premotien AFTER 14 YEARS OF FAITHFUL SERVCE In The Lower Branch Of Congress'Thia Is What He Is Asking Of The People Of * South Carolina fat His Candidacy For the United States Senate. It is only natural that one who has fitted him self for the public service by years of hard work in the interest of the peo ple of the State and Na tion, meanwhile making a record for achievement which is unassailable, should aspire to a field of larger endeavor and of wider and more ex tensive opportunities for servee in the councils of the nation. In politics as in bushressr ’the fewafff of "faithful and meritori ous service should be promotion. ? Il JAMfcs F 1 . BtRNES Candidate for the United States Senate It is on the record he has made as a member of Congress—a record which stands for itself —that Jim Byrnes is asking election to the United States Senate. In Congress he has won re cognition as an able, and zealous representative' He has performed signal service to the State, the Nation and Democracy, and the material return to the people of South Carolina from his work in their behalf in Wash ington • i s among- his proudest achievements. If You Don’t Know Jim Byrnes, Ask The Man Who Does He initiated in Congress the movement to create a Committee on Roads, became a member of the Committee and helped draft the Bill that was adopted, securing the first federal money that came into South Carolina for road construction. Since that time this State has received approxi mately $7,800,000 from the Federal Government t^ aid in road construction. He offered the amend ment, which was adopted, making agricultural paper eligible for rediscount by Federal Reserve Banks. He helped in the creation of the Farm Loan System and the Intermediate Credit Banks, recently established. As a member of the Appropriations Committee he has had charge of the drafting and putting through the House of the Sundry Civil Appropriation Bill providing for all civil acUvites of the government. During the war he piloted through the House the measure that got $10,000,000 to Buy Nitrate of Soda to sell to the farmers at cost. He has fought for Re striction of Immigration. BYRNES HAS MADE GOOD IN THE HOUSE—HE WILL MAKE GOOD IN THE SENATE. * : This advertisement inserted by Byrnes Club of Aiken, P. F. Henderson, President; Rev. P. J. Mc Lean, V. P.; Mrs. W. B. Turner, V. P.; W. W. Edgerton, Secty. ■ m-'-'T off—c- '.m ** • s V *0- WHITLOCK’ 5 MID 10 CENT STORE BIG REDUCTION SALE SEE OUR FOUR AND NINE CENT COUNTERS TWENTY-FIVE CENT VALUES FOR FIFTEEN AND NINETEEN CENTS YOUR CHOICE OF 20 DEPARTMENTS AT AN AVER AGE REDUCTION OF FROM 10 TO 20% Sale Begins Tuesday Morning, August 26 'a FEW SPECIAL VALUES: ~ Men’s Socks, per pair 9c Ladies’ 25c Vests, at 14c Ladies’ 10c Handkerchiefs, at 5c Silk Hose, pair 25c ! Embroidery Thread, 3 skeins for 10c Ladies’ Belts 9c Nice Towels 9c .Large Rugs „ 9c NICE SALAD BOWL GIVEN TO FIRST TEN CUS TOMERS TUESDAY MORNING. STORE OPEN TUESDAY MORNING AT 8 O’CLOCK. -"V